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Private maths tutors that come to you in person or online

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Labrador's tutors include an ATAR 99.75 achiever and school dux, a seasoned high school maths teacher with a Master of Teaching, Gold Coast university medalists in engineering and pharmacy, peer mentors for K–12 and special needs students, passionate Olympiad-level mathematicians, and accomplished graduates with distinction across science, English, business, and creative arts.

Mike
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Mike

Tutor Labrador, QLD
Firstly, I feel like connecting with a student is a big thing in tutoring as if you understand your student, you can better suit their style of learning and allow them to understand the topic easier. Secondly, being patient with a student is essential as you cannot become frustrated they don't understand otherwise they will not learn anything at…
Amen
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Amen

Tutor Biggera Waters, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is give them the confidence to excel independently, without them, following the guidance they provide. I believe I am friendly, approachable and can teach in a way that is simple for the student to understand. I also see myself as honest and reliable, allowing students and parents alike to…
1st Lesson Trial

Help Your Child Succeed in Maths

We will contact you to organize the first Trial Lesson!

Sara
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Sara

Tutor Ashmore, QLD
Generally, students that seek the help of a tutor are struggling with the approach of their teacher to explaining a certain subject. This creates a cycle of feeling overwhelmed and avoiding the subject. I think that the most important thing a tutor can do for a student is help them out of a never ending and unproductive cycle and introduce them…
Antony
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Antony

Tutor Pacific Pines, QLD
Well I believe the most important thing is to get the student to feel comfortable with what they're having trouble with as it will build their confidence and allow them to move on and do the work with minimal help. I am very passionate about Maths and enjoy doing it. I am very reliable, punctual, friendly and…
Gabrielle
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Gabrielle

Tutor Nerang, QLD
One of the most important things a tutor can do for the student is to be flexible in their teaching methods and approaches to learning/teaching content as there are so many different learning styles out there and they are there with us because they may be having trouble with the teaching methods used at school. In those cases in particular, it's…
Luc
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Luc

Tutor Carrara, QLD
The most important thing a tutor can do for a student is to change their perception of what their learning to not only just a task, but rather a hobby. I am an outgoing person, so I would have no issue in talking to the client. I am also renowned for being patient when I help people, which I believe is a necessity in…

Local Reviews

Jacinta is great with Katie and Katie really likes the way she teaches her. Jacinta is a lovely young lady and is very patient with Katie.
Wendy, Arundel

Inside LabradorTutoring Sessions

Content Covered

Year 7 student Sophie worked through **ratio problems** and time zone conversions, also tackling basic probability concepts using real-life examples.

In Year 10, Riley focused on **trigonometry fundamentals** and applying sine, cosine, and tangent rules to solve triangle questions.

Meanwhile, Year 11 student Suneha deepened her understanding of **logarithmic functions**—practicing graphing them as inverses of exponentials—and explored differentiation techniques like the product and quotient rules with step-by-step problem solving.

Recent Challenges

A Year 10 student skipped writing steps in algebra, saying "I can do this in my head," but ended up missing sign errors and struggled to catch mistakes when simplifying.

In Year 7, a student left homework incomplete due to other schoolwork, making it harder to reinforce basic multiplication and division.

One Year 11 learner didn't use test time well—she finished early but left questions blank, missing chances for extra marks.

A senior student in calculus hesitated to attempt new question types, sticking only with familiar practice; this slowed progress with tricky derivative problems and dented her confidence mid-session.

Recent Achievements

A tutor in Labrador recently saw a Year 11 student who used to freeze when faced with time series data now confidently analyse and interpret patterns on her own, showing real independence.

Another high schooler had always been hesitant to ask for help but is now openly raising questions during calculus lessons and double-checking her answers instead of quietly guessing.

In Year 7, one student initially struggled with volume calculations and often skipped writing units, but after working through examples together, he started getting the right answers and consistently included correct units in his work.

Local Spots for Tutoring

If you'd prefer not to have lessons at home, tutoring can also take place at a local library—such as Mobile Library Service—or at your child's school (with permission), like Musgrave Hill State School.